Repeated hypoglycemia remodels neural inputs and disrupts mitochondrial function to blunt glucose-inhibited GHRH neuron responsiveness

Hypoglycemia is a frequent complication of diabetes, limiting therapy and increasing morbidity and mortality. With recurrent hypoglycemia, the counterregulatory response (CRR) to decreased blood glucose is blunted, resulting in hypoglycemia-associated autonomic failure (HAAF). The mechanisms leading...

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Main Authors: Mitchell Bayne, Alexandra Alvarsson, Kavya Devarakonda, Rosemary Li, Maria Jimenez-Gonzalez, Darline Garibay, Kaetlyn Conner, Merina Varghese, Madhavika N. Serasinghe, Jerry E. Chipuk, Patrick R. Hof, Sarah A. Stanley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Clinical investigation 2020-11-01
Series:JCI Insight
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.133488
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spelling doaj-23aab8c66b19432ca7e406bd9e534a7b2021-08-02T15:56:05ZengAmerican Society for Clinical investigationJCI Insight2379-37082020-11-01521Repeated hypoglycemia remodels neural inputs and disrupts mitochondrial function to blunt glucose-inhibited GHRH neuron responsivenessMitchell BayneAlexandra AlvarssonKavya DevarakondaRosemary LiMaria Jimenez-GonzalezDarline GaribayKaetlyn ConnerMerina VargheseMadhavika N. SerasingheJerry E. ChipukPatrick R. HofSarah A. StanleyHypoglycemia is a frequent complication of diabetes, limiting therapy and increasing morbidity and mortality. With recurrent hypoglycemia, the counterregulatory response (CRR) to decreased blood glucose is blunted, resulting in hypoglycemia-associated autonomic failure (HAAF). The mechanisms leading to these blunted effects are only poorly understood. Here, we report, with ISH, IHC, and the tissue-clearing capability of iDISCO+, that growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) neurons represent a unique population of arcuate nucleus neurons activated by glucose deprivation in vivo. Repeated glucose deprivation reduces GHRH neuron activation and remodels excitatory and inhibitory inputs to GHRH neurons. We show that low glucose sensing is coupled to GHRH neuron depolarization, decreased ATP production, and mitochondrial fusion. Repeated hypoglycemia attenuates these responses during low glucose. By maintaining mitochondrial length with the small molecule mitochondrial division inhibitor-1, we preserved hypoglycemia sensitivity in vitro and in vivo. Our findings present possible mechanisms for the blunting of the CRR, significantly broaden our understanding of the structure of GHRH neurons, and reveal that mitochondrial dynamics play an important role in HAAF. We conclude that interventions targeting mitochondrial fission in GHRH neurons may offer a new pathway to prevent HAAF in patients with diabetes.https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.133488MetabolismNeuroscience
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mitchell Bayne
Alexandra Alvarsson
Kavya Devarakonda
Rosemary Li
Maria Jimenez-Gonzalez
Darline Garibay
Kaetlyn Conner
Merina Varghese
Madhavika N. Serasinghe
Jerry E. Chipuk
Patrick R. Hof
Sarah A. Stanley
spellingShingle Mitchell Bayne
Alexandra Alvarsson
Kavya Devarakonda
Rosemary Li
Maria Jimenez-Gonzalez
Darline Garibay
Kaetlyn Conner
Merina Varghese
Madhavika N. Serasinghe
Jerry E. Chipuk
Patrick R. Hof
Sarah A. Stanley
Repeated hypoglycemia remodels neural inputs and disrupts mitochondrial function to blunt glucose-inhibited GHRH neuron responsiveness
JCI Insight
Metabolism
Neuroscience
author_facet Mitchell Bayne
Alexandra Alvarsson
Kavya Devarakonda
Rosemary Li
Maria Jimenez-Gonzalez
Darline Garibay
Kaetlyn Conner
Merina Varghese
Madhavika N. Serasinghe
Jerry E. Chipuk
Patrick R. Hof
Sarah A. Stanley
author_sort Mitchell Bayne
title Repeated hypoglycemia remodels neural inputs and disrupts mitochondrial function to blunt glucose-inhibited GHRH neuron responsiveness
title_short Repeated hypoglycemia remodels neural inputs and disrupts mitochondrial function to blunt glucose-inhibited GHRH neuron responsiveness
title_full Repeated hypoglycemia remodels neural inputs and disrupts mitochondrial function to blunt glucose-inhibited GHRH neuron responsiveness
title_fullStr Repeated hypoglycemia remodels neural inputs and disrupts mitochondrial function to blunt glucose-inhibited GHRH neuron responsiveness
title_full_unstemmed Repeated hypoglycemia remodels neural inputs and disrupts mitochondrial function to blunt glucose-inhibited GHRH neuron responsiveness
title_sort repeated hypoglycemia remodels neural inputs and disrupts mitochondrial function to blunt glucose-inhibited ghrh neuron responsiveness
publisher American Society for Clinical investigation
series JCI Insight
issn 2379-3708
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Hypoglycemia is a frequent complication of diabetes, limiting therapy and increasing morbidity and mortality. With recurrent hypoglycemia, the counterregulatory response (CRR) to decreased blood glucose is blunted, resulting in hypoglycemia-associated autonomic failure (HAAF). The mechanisms leading to these blunted effects are only poorly understood. Here, we report, with ISH, IHC, and the tissue-clearing capability of iDISCO+, that growth hormone releasing hormone (GHRH) neurons represent a unique population of arcuate nucleus neurons activated by glucose deprivation in vivo. Repeated glucose deprivation reduces GHRH neuron activation and remodels excitatory and inhibitory inputs to GHRH neurons. We show that low glucose sensing is coupled to GHRH neuron depolarization, decreased ATP production, and mitochondrial fusion. Repeated hypoglycemia attenuates these responses during low glucose. By maintaining mitochondrial length with the small molecule mitochondrial division inhibitor-1, we preserved hypoglycemia sensitivity in vitro and in vivo. Our findings present possible mechanisms for the blunting of the CRR, significantly broaden our understanding of the structure of GHRH neurons, and reveal that mitochondrial dynamics play an important role in HAAF. We conclude that interventions targeting mitochondrial fission in GHRH neurons may offer a new pathway to prevent HAAF in patients with diabetes.
topic Metabolism
Neuroscience
url https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.133488
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